Saturday, February 04, 2012

 

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What does Lobby Day need?

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Answer existing questions in the poll below to tell us what you think is important for a successful lobby day. Feel free to add "Yes/No" questions of your own if we haven't covered something!



Tell us what ACSS Lobby Day needs

Answer existing questions in the poll below to tell us what you think is important for a successful lobby day. Feel free to add "Yes/No" questions of your own if we haven't covered something!



Tell us what ACSS Lobby Day needs

President's Report

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Are you in the loop?

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ACSS Board Meeting

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Event: 1st Quarter Board Meeting
Dates: January 20-22, 2012
Place: Doubletree Hotel - SF Airport
835 Airport Blvd.
Burlingame, CA 94010
Rate: $79.00/night plus taxes
RSVP: By Monday, December 26th

CLICK HERE to lock in your ACSS discount and make your reservation TODAY!

NOTE: You must have your chapter president's prior approval to get reimbursed for board meeting expenses.

Event: 1st Quarter Board Meeting
Dates: January 20-22, 2012
Place: Doubletree Hotel - SF Airport
835 Airport Blvd.
Burlingame, CA 94010
Rate: $79.00/night plus taxes
RSVP: By Monday, December 26th

CLICK HERE to lock in your ACSS discount and make your reservation TODAY!

NOTE: You must have your chapter president's prior approval to get reimbursed for board meeting expenses.

IMPORTANT LINKS

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Legislation & politics:  Stay up to date on Capitol news, bills we follow, and more.

Get involved! Tell lawmakers, the media, and the public why your career should be better protected.

Save money with ACSS! Discounts on tickets, travel, cars, computers, insurance and more.

Legislation & politics:  Stay up to date on Capitol news, bills we follow, and more.

Get involved! Tell lawmakers, the media, and the public why your career should be better protected.

Save money with ACSS! Discounts on tickets, travel, cars, computers, insurance and more.

Contact Us

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Association of
California State Supervisors

1108 O Street, Suite 317
Sacramento, California 95814
(916) 326-4257 • (800) 624-2137

For questions about this site, contact Kevin Glidden at (916) 326-4302 or kglidden@calcsea.org

Association of
California State Supervisors

1108 O Street, Suite 317
Sacramento, California 95814
(916) 326-4257 • (800) 624-2137

For questions about this site, contact Kevin Glidden at (916) 326-4302 or kglidden@calcsea.org

ACSS News

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To view blog postings by category, click the Blog Topic of your choice at left. For questions about this Web site please email us.

Author: ACSS Communications Created: 11/13/2008 5:17 PM
News from around the state.

Without many places left to cut, California will be scrambling to find another $20.7 billion to balance its budget over the next 19 months. A follow-up story to the Legislative Analyst's Office prediction of a continued huge deficit yesterday.

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Attorney General Jerry Brown issued anopinion today supporting the salary-setting commission's move to cut legislators' salaries in mid-term. The opinion affects 20 senators. The commission voted in May to cut the salaries of legislators and statewide elected officials by 18 percent, but 20 senators claimed they would be be affected because they were in the middle of their terms.

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The State Worker this morning runs down some of the consequences state workers could face as the state copes with a predicted $21 billion deficit. A sampling of possibilities: Real layoffs, no raises, a furlough extension.

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California has the most polarized state Legislature in the country. According to a Sacramento Bee analysis, Democrats in the California Legislature voted with their party or abstained 99 percent of the time; Republicans voted with their party or abstained 96 percent of the time. Sen Abel Maldonado, a Republican from Santa Maria, has one of the best bipartisan records: He voted against his party 237 times, about 40 percent.

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Superior Court Judge Timothy Frawley has tentative ruled not to allow furlough lawsuits to be coordinated and transferred to Sacramento. Final ruling is expected later today. Tentative rulings are rarely changed.

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The Department of Personnel Administration is training its best and brightest state workers to take over top jobs as supervisors and managers become eligible to retire in large numbers. The department's "Leadership Academy" offers graduate-level courses in Sacramento. The students must interview and apply to take them.

 

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The State Worker blog today reports this morning that the Franchise Tax Board will be closing one hour early -- at 4 p.m -- beginning Nov. 1. Reason? "Budget constraints." The blog also gives the back and forth of the SCIF bonus, which was stopped by DPA.

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From calpensions.com: State Treasurer Bill Lockyer warned California at a legislative hearing that the state will go bankrupt if the pension system isn't reformed. He also said he didn't have a solution to the pension problem "other than constructive dialogue."

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From Capitol Weekly: State worker pensions continue to come under attack: A group of Orange County politicos has filed two proposed ballot initiatives to bar unions from deducting money from members' paychecks for political purposes and require unions to get written permission before deducting money for political activity. Two similar initiatives were rejected in the past. A third initiative by the California Foundation for Fiscal Responsibility would lower pension benefits, increase retirement age and establish a statewide pension rate.

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First, the State Worker blog reported the UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education had issued a study ("The High Cost of Furloughs") showing that one furlough day would have the saved the state more money than three furlough days. The Berkeley study also noted the hardship the furloughs have caused state workers and the folly of furloughing workers in revenue-generating departments. Now a San Diego Union-Tribune blog attempts to reveal the study's "shoddiness."

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In failing to get a single Republican vote in the Senate, a bill to protect businesses offering discounts to laid-off and furloughed workers has died. The Assembly passed the measure 78-0. Author Gloria Negrete McLeod said she'll try again in January. The failure of the bill doesn't prevent establishments from offering discounts; the bill would have protected them from lawsuits if they do.

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The Legislature has scored the lowest rating in the history of the Field Poll (26 years) with just 13 percent approving the job they're doing. The governor's approval rating was 27 percent, not quite as low as Gray Davis when he was ousted. The impact of budget cuts and furloughs is causing the drop, a Field Poll spokesman said.

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Second of two-parts: The Legislature did make some cuts, and Senate staffers are furloughed one day a month, but Assembly workers are not furloughed and lawmakers did not suffer cuts as steep as state workers and offices did. Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg asked senators to take a voluntary 5 percent paycut, but two did not. Speaker Karen Bass did not ask Assembly members to take the cut, and most did not. (This is a two-page story.)

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Working for the Legislature can pay off: Legislative staffers can retire at 50 with only five years of service and full lifetime health benefits. And that's just the beginning. Today and tomorrow, The Sacramento Bee examines the state Legislature's budget and spending. The article includes links to a graph and a list comparing legislative benefits with the benefits state workers get.

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State controller John Chiang reports that state revenues came in $1.1 billion below estimates in the first quarter of this fiscal year. "I urge lawmakers and the governor to prepare for more difficult decisions ahead," Chiang said.

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